You can thank me for making you look harder lol, a state isn't a number. Since you're trying hard to "maths", a rate when talking disease on a time scale (as in your statement of "cancer rates" or "rise in cancer" as your title suggests), is number of cases per period of time.
Uh - it doesn't matter, cuz cases drives deaths. Basic stuff. Sorry it seems advanced. It's really not. But go right ahead and nitpick until you have meaningful input. I'll wait. (Jeopardy song playing...)
I'd post graphs on early detection vs survivability & efficacy of treatments against metastasis to echo ricter but you're struggling w/basic plots as it is already.
https://jessicar.substack.com/p/do-the-covid-19-injections-contain Too technical for me to really follow, but maybe you can. and this is MUCH easier to follow: https://virutron.com/pathologist-dr-ryan-cole-on-post-jab-cancer-explosion-and-excess-mortality/ Both research doctors. Cole is a pathologist, so an expert in the subject matter.
Post away. While you're at it, how about evidence that the small number of localized hospitals (mostly major urban ones like NY) correlate with a local rise in cancer DEATHS (better?) Cause it doesn't. The cancer DEATH RATES were evenly spread, but the full hospitals were localized. Could explain some of the increase, but only a smallish percentage.
I'm not going to go look for non-existent evidence of crackpot conspiracies you're reading on twitter, that onus is on you. Better yet, stick to digging ditches, basic arithmetic is above your pay grade.